Catching Up With: Paul Smolinski
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Bryce Alderton
The first crack at coaching has gone fairly well for Paul
Smolinski.
In just four years, the 32-year-old men’s golf coach at UC Irvine has
led the Anteaters to consecutive Big West Conference championships the
last two seasons, along with being named Big West Conference Coach of the
Year for the second straight year this season.
The team’s conference championship in 2001 was the program’s first in
23 years.
The Anteaters completed their season Saturday at the NCAA West
Regional championships in Albuquerque, N.M., finishing 22nd.
Smolinski led the team to the NCAA Championships in 2001 after the
Anteaters finished third in the NCAA Regional, and considers that
experience, along with coaching the team, as his best moments in golf.
Even tough Smolinski won the Coach of the Year award, he credits his
players for the team’s success. Coaches of the nine Big West schools vote
for the Coach of the Year.
“Obviously I’m excited to receive an award given by my peers, that
they think I’m doing a good job with the program,” Smolinski said. “It
was gratifying at the same time. The guys do all the work. Their
performance allows me to look good.”
The Anteaters won the conference title by 13 shots over second-place
Pacific at Serrano Country Club in El Dorado Hills, April 22-23.
Smolinski credits recruiting what he calls “quality players and
quality people” as the main reason his program has resurrected itself in
the last two seasons.
“I set out to do (recruiting) from the get-go, and it turned out
pretty well,” Smolinski said. “These are good players who are good
students and good on the golf course.”
Golfers Nick Asbrock, Mike Lavery, Brandon Murray, Kevin Stevens and
Nate Yates were honored as Big West Scholar-Athletes at the team’s annual
banquet May 13.
Requirements for this award include maintaining a 3.0 GPA over three
quarters or a 3.2 GPA over two quarters for freshmen. Student-athletes
must also earn letters in their sports.
On the course, Smolinski said the team usually practices five times a
week, either hitting balls on the range or playing a round.
But that’s not all the work that goes into molding this golf team.
The players also spend time in the weight room, lifting weights and
strengthening their conditioning on the treadmill or stair climber.
Smolinski encourages his team to play what he calls “percentage golf.”
“We try to eliminate the big number,” he said. “We try to get the ball
in the widest part of the fairway, playing conservative shots to
eliminate slighting ourselves on the greens.”
Smolinski schedules weekly practices and tournaments, recruits
players, fund raises, travels with the team to tournaments and instructs
golfers at a UCI summer camp for players ages, 7-17, who vary in
abilities from beginner to more advanced.
Some of the UCI golfers have their own instructors who work on the
player’s swing, Smolinski said.
“Obviously we want them competing and we want them working on their
game full time,” Smolinski said. “They’re at this levelbecause they’re
committed to the game. It doesn’t take a lot of coercing on my part.”
Two UCI golfers, juniors Mike Lavery and Jeff Coburn, qualified for
the California Amateur Golf Championship at Pebble Beach Golf Links and
The Links at Spanish Bay June 17-22.
Junior Ryan Armstrong won the Big West Conference individual title,
edging Coburn and Pacific’s Matt Hanson in a three-way playoff, after all
three had finished with a 7-under-par 209 for the three-day tournament.
The Anteaters lose only one senior, Kevin Stevens, and Smolinski has
been busy recruiting, signing two players, a junior college transfer from
Mission Viejo and a high school senior out of Yorba Linda.
Prior to joining UCI four years ago, Smolinski was the head golf
professional at Coto de Caza Golf & Racquet Club.
That’s when former UCI men’s golf coach and current director of golf
at the school, Jeff Johnston, told Smolinski he would be leaving the
position. Smolinski hadn’t coached before.
“I was excited about the opportunity and maybe was a little nervous
with exactly what to expect,” Smolinski said. “But things have gone well
and I’m sure happy I made the decision now.”
When he isn’t recruiting, coaching and instructing at the golf camp,
Smolinski likes to fish and spend time with his family. Smolinski and
wife Lesli live in Rancho Santa Margarita.
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